Let’s Encrypt is just as secure as paid certs. They’re held to the same security standard.
Let’s Encrypt is just as secure as paid certs. They’re held to the same security standard.
Yes, they are.
I believe this replaces esync and fsync. IIRC it’s slightly faster and has the benefit of being mainlined.
I also just learned this and I work in tech.
Lemme give a preview of the result:
Israeli estimate: 3000
Hamas estimate: 300000
I promise you full size ovens can have exposed heat elements.
The House should be about to pass laws that curtail the rights of the executive branch. This is a key part of the system of checks and balances.
Disabling JavaScript fixes 95% of these issues too.
Ceph is a huge amount of overhead, both engineering and compute resources, for this usecase.
This would be a mixed bag because it could open the door on more conventional wars since it would left the threat of MAD.
Sometimes I think this community should be called homelab instead of selfhosted based on the kinds of questions
What’s the cost and impact of downtime for you? If you’re doing this for personal use it’s probably minimal for both so doesn’t really matter. If you want to try the new thing and you’re not afraid of the time investment or potential downtime then go for it
Runc is native.
What you’re looking for is a backup. RAID is not a backup, as another poster said it’s a tool for enduring high availability, and possibly higher throughput.
Buy a second pi and put it in another location in your house or even better at friends house then configure regular backups of your important data to it. There are also cloud services for doing backups which are great because having a location to do off-site backups to can be really hard to get as an individual.
Fair enough. Personally I’d start with their documentation then: https://docs.openstack.org/install-guide/
For OS it looks like they support RHEL/CentOS, Ubuntu, Debian, and SUSE so I’d stick with one of those.
Openstack is like self-hosting your own cloud provider. My 2 cents is that it’s probably way overkill for personal use. You’d probably be interested in it if you had a lot of physical servers you wanted to present as a single pooled resource for utilization.
How does one install it?
From what I heard from a former coworker - with great difficulty.
What is the difference between a hypervisor/openstack/a container service (podman,docker)?
A hypervisor runs virtual machines. A container service runs containers which are like virtual machines that share the host’s kernel (more to it than that but that’s the simplest explanation). Openstack is a large ecosystem of pieces of software that runs the aforementioned components and coordinates it between a horizontally scaling number of physical servers. Here’s a chart showing all the potential components: https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/a/a5/Openstack-map-v20221001.jpg
If you’re asking what the difference between a container service and a hypervisor are then I’d really recommend against pursuing this until you get more experience.
Yeah but have you seen what the masses choose sometimes?